The Rolling Stone reporter chronicles the pack of journalists who followed the 1972 presidential campaign betweeen McGovern and Nixon, covering the election for news organizations across the country, in a fascinating look at how the news is made in America. Reprint. 20,000 first printing.[...]
Posters by their very nature are ephemeral: crookedly plastered on a roadside billboard, tacked to the back of a tabac, they lasted a few weeks until advertisers issued another imaginative argument for soap or an ocean voyage. While few contemporary observers understood the richness of their design [...]
Posters of the Art Deco period, which once graced billboards and walls to advertise every variety of product, service, entertainment, or political cause, are today prized for the richness of their design and ingenuity; they offer inspiration for graphic designers and are highly collectible. Now, Wil[...]
Watch the hills literally come alive
in this magnificent pop-up adventure drawn from
Rodgers & Hammerstein's classic, "The Sound of Music."
With paper engineering as unforgettable as each
timeless melody, "The Sound of Music "transports readers
to the lush green hills of the Von [...]
From exclusive interviews with director Ken Russell and new interviews with cast, crew, and historians, comes this examination of the beautifully blasphemous film "The Devils." Based on historical fact, this controversial 1971 film is about an oversexed priest and a group of sexually repressed nuns [...]